http;//www.thecharlottepost.com 1C tKIje Cljarlotte ^osit SPORTS •‘Thursday, December 18, 2003 ,ack College Sports/4C PANTHERS CAN EXHALE NOW UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL PHOTO/STEPHEN DUNN Carolina linebacker Brian Allen hits Arizona tight end Freddie Jones after a first-down catch in the Panthers’ 20-17 win in Tempe, Ariz. The Panthers wrapped up the NFC South championship with the victory, their second division title in franchise history. Division lide anoMis key siarters chance to iieai By C. Jemal Horton FOR THE CHARLOTTE POST For the first time in a • month, smiles penetrated the massive breezeways of Ericsson Stadium. The' luxury vehicles in ■ the Carolina Panthers parking lot seemed to have an extra gleam this week. That ugly, three-game losing streak that got everyone around, here so agitated was a distant memory, as the Queen City welcomed its football team back into its bosom. Owner Jerry Richardson patted his coach on the back. It was official: The Carolina Panthers were in the playoffs again. After a last-minute vic tory at Arizona last week, the Panthers (9-5) clinched the NFC South title and assured them selves of being one of the top four seeds among con ference playoff teams. And, now, Simda/s home game against the lowly Detroit Lions (4-10) does n’t loom so large. Instead of playing the final two games of the season to gain a sem blance of momentum for the postseason, the Panthers most likely will close by letting some key players rest and get healthy. Star running back Stephen Davis, who has been hampered by an ankle injury in recent weeks, is a prime candi- See PANTHERS/2C Heisman heavily hyped, but award is empty C. Jemal Horton 'Wanna know what it means to get a free trip to New York City, get your butt kissed on ESPN for two whole hours, and then get crowned as the single- best college football player in the land? Nothing. - The Heisman Trophy has turned into a farce. It has turned into every bit the joke the Academy Awards have been for generations and the Bowl Championship Series has become in recent years. It doesn’t mean a thing to win the Heisman, because the award has gotten so far away from what it alleged ly is supposed to be. . According to the Downtown Athletic Club, which presents the trophy, the Heisman goes “each year to the Outstanding College Football Player in the United States.” Please, If you believe Oklahoma quarterback Jason White is the outstanding player in the country... well, let’s just hope you don’t really believe that. Something’s got to be done. The Downtown Athletic Club needs to change the award so it goes to “Our Favorite Quarterback and Occasional Running Back Who Plays for the Tbp-S Tteam We Like the Most.” Or it needs to go back and start picking the most out standing player in America every year. . This'year’s award should have gone to Pittsburgh’s Larry Fitzgerald, who fin ished second. Don’t give me anything about Fitzgerald’s team finishing in the mid dle of the Big East pack. Don’t give me ansdhing about Fitzgerald being a sophomore. Don’t give me anything about Fitzgerald having a bad game against Miami. Fitzgerald was the out standing player in Division I-A this season. It doesn’t matter how vot ers chose to dress it up. The most valuable player? Fitzgerald. The most domi nant? Fitzgerald, The mes merizing? Fitzgerald. And the list goes on. And, by the way. University of Southern California sophomore wide receiver Mike Williams, who wasn’t even invited to New York, was the second- most outstanding player in Division I-A. The Heisman is losing credibility each year voters put some patsy on the stage to give an acceptance speech for an award he doesn’t deserve. Consider the last three years: • This year, it was White. Yeah, right. In 2002, it was Carson Palmer. He got the award after having one stellar game, a prime-time affair against Notre Dame. Otherwise, the award should have gone to Miami’s unstoppable Wfilis McGahee. In 2001, it was Eric Crouch. Will someone please tell me how a guy can throw seven touch- dovm passes and 10 inter ceptions and stiU win the Heisman Trophy? Look, Jason White is a very good college quarter back. But it could be argued that he wasn’t even the best player on his team. That honor, most likely, would go to defensive tack le Tbrnmie Harris. Which brings us to anoth er outrageous thing about the Heisman: If not a single defensive player has won the award, how can it be Please see HEISMAN/2C Withers Withers key to 49ers’ success By James Hamlin FORTHE CHARLOTTE POST In the Charlotte 49ers’ 85-64 vrin over Appalachian State senior Butter Johnson led the team in scoring with 16 points. Fellow senior Demon Brown led in assists with 6. On the season, junior guard Brendan Plavich is leading the team in scoring, while 7-foot freshman Martin Iti is the leading shot blocker. But one thing is apparent: when the 49ers play very well sopho more forward Curtis Withers does, too. In last week’s win over Appalachian State, Withers scored 15 points, pulled down 10 rebounds and dished out 5 assists. He was the second lead ing scorer, tops in reboxmds, and second in assists in that game. For the season he is averaging a near double-double, just under 14 points and 10 rebounds, and in the only game he didn’t play the 49ers lost to less-talented George Washington. “Our team needs all the pieces and he’s certainly an important piece,” says 49ers head coach Bobby Lutz. “He can really pass the basketball. He’s a really good post passer. In Syracuse he was tremendous against their press. He can do some things that our other bigger guys can’t do.” Lutz is referring to 49ers biggest -win of the season so far a 96-92 overtime defeat of Syracuse where Withers scored 16, pulled down 7 rebounds and added 3 assists. What has really helped Charlotte this season is Withers’ rebounding. He hit the weight room hard spending time with the team’s strength and conditioning coach this summer to help his rebounding, but that’s not aU. “I worked on my agility and foot work,” says Withers, “(lb) get quicker with my feet as far as guard ing a quicker (power forward because) we play a lot of small teams.” Please see WITHERS/3C After rookie season, black NASCAR owner closes shop THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CONCORD - The only black- owned team in NASCAR’s top level shut down last week after losing its sponsor. BelCar Racing fielded the No. 54 Ford for Tbdd Bodine this season. Sam Belnavis of Charlotte was the majority car owner along with Travis Carter. The team was sponsored by the National Guard, which signed Wednesday to sponsor Greg Biffie and the No. 16 Ford for Roush Racing. In announcing Biffie’s new sponsor, the Roush team also intro duced Belna'vis as its director of diversity programs. “I knew the direction the National Guard was taking,” Belna-vis said. “But I needed a platform for my career but also a platform that could substantiate and support a true diversity program.” Carter is trying to secure sponsor ship for his own team. Lack of sponsorship forced Sam Belnavis, co-owner of BelCar Racing, to close shop last week. U.S. track stars rnay go low-key for Athens By Tom Foreman Jr. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS RALEIGH—As a precaution, American track and field ath letes at the 2004 Athens Olympics might be discour aged from wearing red, white and blue or anything vrith “USA” when they are not com peting. “For security reasons, if that’s the way they want to go, that’s what well do,” said U.S. men’s track coach George Williams, also track and field coach at St. Augustine’s College in Raleigh. USA Track & Field spokes woman JiU Geer said that “off track uniform issues are gov erned by the U.S. Olympic Committee.” “Coaching and managerial teams always look at a number of security issues before any international competition, including clothing,” Geer said. “For the 2004 Games, the Olympic team is within the oversight of the U.S. Olympic Committee.” A spokesman for the USOC Williams did not return a call seeking comment on whether that organization was consider ing such a proposal. Greece is spending more than $750 million for security - the biggest security bud get in Olympic history and more than 3 1/2 times as much as what was spent for the 2000 Sydney Games. Authorities plan to deploy about 50,000 security personnel - including 16,000 soldiers — during the games. Williams said track officials have suggested ways to lower the profile of American ath letes around Athens. “They said it would be good if we low-keyed it,” he said. But he added: “Some of us are going to look American. We’re going to have our Bermuda shorts on and our white tennis shoes. It’s going to be hard to do.” intliiiVtii aruJMjS SBSBB&T 5^5555? .•,iiiiLr;T,iiiiV,iQi.aatii.iiM:i